Delyan Peevski

President of the Russophile Movement in Bulgaria charged with espionage is trying to pose as a victim and now stands on the defensive. As anyone could guess he is doing it using fakes targeting lawmaker and publisher of Telegraph Media Delyan Peevski.

What does Hristo Ivanov’s NGO Justice for Everyone do when it is not marching in support of judge №1 Lozan Panov? Option 1: it is spending grant funding. Option 2: it teams up with another NGO funded by the fugitive banker Tsvetan Vassilev, aka the Bulgarian Madoff.

Being an agent of State Security and yet having the gal to pose as a fighter against your patron Russia is like kicking your grandmother down the stairs and telling the world that she was only running. You are neither a fighter nor anything but that country’s propaganda servant. The State Security, however, had no scruples, and its agents lack those to this day, continuing to follow the messages of their mentors, only dressed up in a pro-NATO camouflage – you know, just to deceive the enemy.

The fugitive banker Tsvetan Vassilev’s pawns – indicted arms dealer Emiliyan Gebrev and pseudo-diplomat Boyko Noev – have used the resources of the agency Military Information (MI) for personal benefit. Thanks to pressure exerted by Vassilev, who is indicted for the engineered failure of CorpBank and is hiding in Serbia, the two businessmen made use of all MI resources. That included both the agency’s access to highly classified NATO information and using its intelligence officers as brokers in arms deals. These are all “NATO services” invaluable to Vassilev and company, who have serious Russian ties.

On 2 September the daily newspaper Sega published a critical analysis about Bulgaria’s EU Commissioner Mariya Gabriel, which has been nominated for a second term by the government in Sofia. The author of the piece, Svetoslav Terziev, opines that it is irrelevant what area the country is put in charge of via its spot on the European Commission, insinuating that Mariya Gabriel is unfit to do the job.

Capital, the flagship of Media Empire ruled by oligarch Prokopiev, is again shooting blank at the lawmaker and publisher of Telegraph Media Delyan Peevski. Following the tradition, they are firing blank rounds because no matter how much the indicted oligarch wants to quote damning facts about Peevski there are no such facts but only ludicrous gossips and backroom deals.

In the heart of Washington, less than a mile from the White House, is the headquarters of one of the world’s most reputable arbitration institutions. Its members are almost all UN countries and its rulings are as good as written in stone.

Agent Academician seems delirious again; and they say that the African swine fever is not dangerous for people. In a political “analysis” full of pathos, published on his obliging website, Ognyan Stefanov stirs up a classical hodgepodge of fake news. The old State Security operative laments the fact that authorities are investigating a suspicious half a million levs of Ivan Kostov’s finances and likens the former PM to a tall tree buffeted by hurricanes whereas the bushes survive just fine low to the ground.

The Institute for Market Economics, whose chairperson is the product of communist nomenclature Krasen Stanchev, has provided an opinion piece in service of the oligarch Ivo Prokopiev’s interests for the attention of Capital Weekly. Actually, the piece is from three weeks ago, but Prokopiev’s people are only now discovering it.

In the five years since the CorpBank scandal first surfaced three opinions by world-renowned experts have proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that the lender was turned by its majority owner Tsvetan Vassilev into a financial pyramid and his personal piggy-bank.